News Script

Amazon UK CEO blames job market, not youth, for record unemployment

5/22/2026 · News

Amazon’s UK managing director has dismissed claims that young workers are to blame for rising unemployment. Instead, he points to structural flaws in the job market and calls for systemic change. The comments come as new data shows youth joblessness at a five-year high.

The head of Amazon’s UK operations has broken ranks with political rhetoric, declaring that record youth unemployment is not the fault of young people but a sign of structural failure in the job market.

1.3 millionYoung people aged 16 to 24 are unemployed, the highest figure since 2019

In a rare public intervention, John Boumphrey, Amazon UK’s managing director, told a parliamentary committee on Tuesday that blaming young workers for joblessness misses the mark entirely. “We have a system that isn’t creating enough opportunities for young people to enter the workforce,” he said. “It’s not about ambition or skill—it’s about access.”

Key Points

  • ⚡ Record youth unemployment at 1.3 million, highest since 2019
  • 🚀 Amazon UK boss says job market, not young people, is failing
  • 🔍 Calls for systemic changes to create entry-level opportunities

Boumphrey’s remarks follow the release of government data showing that youth unemployment rose by 8% in the last quarter alone. The trend has defied seasonal patterns, with economists warning that traditional pathways into employment—apprenticeships, entry-level roles, and graduate schemes—have either disappeared or become prohibitively competitive.

📋 By The Numbers

  • 8% — Increase in youth unemployment in Q2 2024
  • 12% — Decline in entry-level job postings since 2022
  • 45% — Young workers in precarious gig economy roles

The Amazon executive pointed to a widening skills gap and an over-reliance on higher education as key factors. “We need to rethink how we prepare young people for work,” he said. “Vocational training, on-the-job learning, and partnerships between businesses and schools are not optional—they’re essential.”

Sector2022 Entry-Level Jobs2024 Entry-Level Jobs
Retail15,0008,500
Manufacturing12,0006,200
Tech22,00014,000

Critics argue that large corporations like Amazon should take more responsibility for training and hiring young workers. Boumphrey acknowledged the criticism but stressed that government policy and educational institutions must also adapt. “No single company can fix this alone,” he said. “We need a collective effort.”

💡 Pro Tip

Avoid over-qualified candidates for entry-level roles. Many young workers lack formal experience but possess the adaptability and digital skills employers need.

The parliamentary committee is set to publish a report next month outlining potential solutions, including incentives for businesses that hire young people and expanded apprenticeship programs. Boumphrey urged swift action, warning that prolonged inaction could lead to a “lost generation” of workers.

For now, the debate has shifted from blaming young people to questioning the systems meant to support them. Boumphrey’s testimony may have been the first public push from a corporate leader to acknowledge that the problem lies not with the unemployed, but with the economy that fails to employ them.

youth unemploymentAmazon UKjob marketvocational trainingeconomic policy